Titus Livius

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Definition

Proper noun A Roman historian from the 1st century BC to the 1st century AD, renowned for his monumental work Ab Urbe Condita Libri (Books from the Foundation of the City), which chronicled the history of Rome from its legendary origins to his own time.

Usage

The name "Titus Livius" is used to refer to the historian himself or to his work. * The surviving books of Titus Livius are a primary source for early Roman history. * The account of Hannibal's crossing of the Alps comes from Titus Livius.

Advanced Usage
  • Livy: This is the common Anglicized name for Titus Livius. It is used interchangeably in English scholarship and literature.
    • The historian Livy detailed the virtues of the Roman Republic.
Variants and Related Words
  • Livian (adjective): Pertaining to or characteristic of the works or style of Titus Livius.
    • The narrative follows a Livian model of historical storytelling.
Synonyms
  • Livy (Proper noun): The conventional English name for the historian.
  • The Annalist (Noun, contextual): A descriptive term referencing his method of writing history in a year-by-year (annalistic) format.
Related Phrases and Contexts
  • Ab Urbe Condita (Latin phrase): The title of Livy's history, meaning "From the Foundation of the City." It is the work for which he is exclusively known.
    • In Ab Urbe Condita, Livy aimed to document both the rise of Rome and its moral decline.
  • The Livian Tradition (Noun phrase): Refers to the style, perspective, and body of historical narrative established by Livy that influenced later historians.
Noun
  1. Roman historian whose history of Rome filled 142 volumes (of which only 35 survive) including the earliest history of the war with Hannibal (59 BC to AD 17)

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